In ''Key Issues in Women's Work'' (2nd ed., 2004), sociologist
Catherine Hakim compares four competing theories of male dominance, including Goldberg's theory of patriarchy as well as her own preference theory, and notes the strengths and weaknesses of patriarchy theory. For example, women's dislike of female bosses is consistent with Goldberg's theory. Goldberg's "is the only theory that can explain some of the more inconvenient facts about women as well as men". "No other theory has been offered which can explain women's rejection of females in authority". but concludes that Goldberg's thesis has yet to be fully proven. In her book's final chapter, after reviewing the empirical evidence, she notes that none of the four competing theories fully explains women's subordination, but that preference theory rules out the salience of sex and gender, given the evidence for female heterogeneity. The
Marxist anthropologist
Eleanor Leacock takes a more political view of Goldberg's work. In a response to Goldberg's
The Inevitability of Patriarchy, she characterizes Goldberg's theories as simplistic and irresponsible: "To consign the grim brutalities of abused power we see everywhere about us to what amounts to masculine 'original sin' not only denies the historical and ethnographic record... but seriously disarms all of us, as humanity, in the urgency of our need to understand and redirect our social life if we would insure ourselves a future."
Biological anthropologist Frank B. Livingstone criticizes Goldberg's understanding of causation in evolution, characterizing the evolutionary model presented in
The Inevitability of Patriarchy as "absolutely backward". According to Livingstone, social behavior drives evolution rather than the other way around: "Contrary to Goldberg, I do not believe that a genetic or physiological change will occur first and then cause social or behavioral change. In fact, just the opposite, the behavior or way of life of a population determines the fitness values of the genotypes, and this changes the genetic characteristics of the population."
Selection of Reviews 1973–1993 • Eleanor Maccoby, "Sex in the social order",
Science 182 (November, 1973): 469ff. [Review of
The Inevitability of Patriarchy] • Eleanor Leacock. 'The Inevitability of Patriarchy'.
American Anthropologist new series
76 (1974): 363-365. • Frank B Livingstone. 'The Inevitability of Patriarchy'.
American Anthropologist new series
76 (1974): 365-367. • Steven Goldberg. 'Response to Leacock and Livingstone'.
American Anthropologist new series
77 (1975): 69-73. • Eleanor Leacock. 'On Goldberg's Response'.
American Anthropologist new series
77 (1975): 73-75. • Frank B Livingstone. 'Reply to Goldberg'.
American Anthropologist new series
77 (1975): 75-77. • Joan Huber. 'The Inevitability of Patriarchy'.
The American Journal of Sociology 81 (1974): 567-568. • Steven Goldberg. 'Comment on Huber's Review of the Inevitability of Patriarchy'.
The American Journal of Sociology 82 (1976): 687-690. • Joan Huber. 'Huber's Reply to Goldberg'.
The American Journal of Sociology 82 (1976): 690-691. • The September/October issue of
Society vol. 23, no. 6 (1986) was devoted to discussion of
The Inevitability of Patriarchy. It contained two essays by Goldberg and seven by critics. == See also ==